 Excerpt from the journal, Addiction. Addiction is published on behalf of the Society for the Study of Addiction (SSA) by Blackwell Publishing. The definitive version is available at
www.blackwell-synergy.com. Conversation with Raphael Mechoulam. Addiction. 2007; 102(6), 887-893. Early InfluencesAddiction (A): Raphael, so often a person’s later career has its
roots in their childhood and the cultural atmosphere at home.
Can you tell me something about your early life?
Raphael Mechoulam (RM): I was born in 1930—for my
family a happy time in eastern Europe. The wounds of
the First World War were not too painful any more and
Hitler was still considered a demented curiosity. My
father, who had graduated from one of the finest
medical schools in Europe, in Vienna, was a prominent
physician, head of a hospital, while my mother, who
had studied in Berlin, enjoyed the life of a well-to-do
Jewish family. Books, concerts, the theatre and medicine
were part of my family background. I was sent to an
American Grade School, where I had the only regular
schooling I can remember. Then the Second World War
broke out. Bulgaria joined hands with Germany. Anti-
Semitic laws made our life almost unbearable. My father
took a position as a physician in a village, with no
running water or electricity, hoping that we would be
more secure up in the Balkans. We had to move from
village to village over the years. My father was sent to a
concentration camp in Bulgaria, but luckily we all survived.
In 1944 a communist regime was established.
The new leaders, who had spent their formative years in
Moscow, copied the Russian Soviet system to the last
iota. I felt that my life was being swept in a flood of brain
washing, but I remember with gratitude the fine teachers
at the Sofia First Male Gymnasium, who did their
best under very difficult circumstances. I studied chemical
engineering for about a year—and disliked it. We
emigrated to Israel in 1949 where I wanted to study
chemistry, but had to wait for about a year as the university
chemical laboratories on Mount Scopus were
surrounded by the Arab Legion. Slowly academic life
improved, but looking back I realize today that I missed
the challenges and excitement of a regular university
education. Surprisingly, I first tasted the sweet taste of
research in the Army. I was attached to a research unit
and worked on various projects—mainly on insecticides,
as insects had always been a scourge in the Middle East.
I found the independence of research to be an addiction
from which I do not want to be cured. Entering the Cannabis ResearchA: You published your first paper on cannabis more than
40 years ago.What led you into this field, which at the time
was considered of minor interest and importance?
RM: In the early 1960s I returned to Israel from a postdoctoral
stay at the Rockefeller Institute in New York,
where I worked with the late Professor S. W. Pelletier on
investigations on the structure of some plant triterpenes.
My PhD thesis (with F. Sondheimer) in the mid-
1950s was on synthetic chemistry, mostly in the field of
steroids. I found research at the borderline of chemistry
and biology fascinating. I believed then, and I still
believe, that the separation of scientific fields is just
an admission of our limited ability to learn and understand
several scientific areas. In Nature the border does
not exist. If a leaf and a tree were able to think they would not know the difference between chemistry and
biology. ‘that the separation of scientific fields is just an
admission of our limited ability to learn and
understand several scientific areas . . . If a leaf
and a tree were able to think they would not
know the difference between chemistry and
biology.’ A: And back in Israel?
RM: Back in Israel I was appointed to a junior faculty
position in the chemistry department of the Weizmann
Institute in Rehovot. In Israel, as in the US and many
countries in Europe, new staff members are supposed to
choose their own research topics and then, after
5–6 years, their success (or lack of it) is evaluated and the
junior staff member obtains (or does not obtain) tenure. I
chose to work on several topics on the chemistry and
actions of natural products. One of my topics was the
constituents of cannabis. A:Why that topic?
RM: Why cannabis? On reading the old literature on cannabis
I was surprised to note that from a modern point of
view the field was ripe for a reinvestigation. In the early
1960s it was almost totally neglected. There were 19thcentury
papers inmany languages. Being born in Europe
I had to know many languages—including French,
German and Russian—in which most of the old cannabis
papers were written, which helped me in my literary
searches. I found and read dozens of publications in longforgotten
and obscure journals. Then I went to the more
recent papers by Roger Adams, a prominent US chemist,
and by Lord Alexander Todd, a Nobel Prize-winner, and
was surprised to find that in spite of the high level of
research conducted in their laboratories, apparently the
active constituent(s) of cannabis had never been isolated
in pure form and no definite structure(s) had been put
forward. The reasons may have been technical.We know
today that the cannabinoids—a termI coined some years
later—are present in cannabis as a mixture of a large
number of closely related constituents, which were
apparently difficult to separate by the methods available
in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Chromatography
methods were well developed at the time I started work
and the availability of novel spectrometric methods
looked promising for the structure elucidations, which in
the field of natural products were, until then, based on
laborious chemical degradation work. I assumed that of
particular help could be an early type of a nuclear magnetic
resonance (NMR) spectrometrometer that was built and used in the physics department. Luckily I was proved
right. A:Why was the cannabis field dormant at the time and why
did you think that it was of importance?
RM: The three major illicit drugs derived from plantswere
then, and still are, opium, coca and cannabis. Morphine
had been isolated from opium early in the 19th century
and its very complicated structure was elucidated in the
1920s by Sir Robert Robinson. Cocaine was isolated from
coca leaves in the middle of the 19th century and the
famous chemist Richard Willstatter had been able to
describe its unusual structure in the last decade of the
19th century. The availability of pure materials made
possible biochemical, pharmacological and clinical work
with these important alkaloids. Modern scientists refrain
from work on mixtures—and crude plant extracts are
complicated mixtures—as the results of such research
are difficult to reproduce and interpret. As the active constituent(
s) of cannabis was not available in pure form
there was very little modern biological and clinical work
on it. A further difficultywas a legal one. As cannabiswas
an illicit substance it was not readily available to most
scientists. Even if obtained legally, research with it was a
laboratory nightmare. Inmany countries special security
precautions had to be undertaken. In most universities
researchers could not follow the security regulations
effectively and pharmaceutical companies did not want
the presumed notoriety of ‘trying to make money out of
marijuana’. From a scientific point of view cannabis
research had effectively been eliminated. A: How did you overcome these obstacles?
RM: I was unaware of them. I went to the administrative
director of theWeizmann Institute and simply asked him
whether he knew somebody at Police Headquarters. After
realizing that I was not trying to settle some minor traffic
ticket but was requesting starting material for research,
he called the head of the investigative branch at Police
Headquarters, with whom he had been together in the
army. I heard the police officer asking ‘Is he (meaning me)
reliable?’. On receiving a positive answer, he asked me to
come over to Tel Aviv and thus I obtained 5 kg of superb,
smuggled Lebanese hashish. I took a bus back to Rehovot,
nobody in the bus realizing that the smell from my bag
was from hashish. Later we found that both the head of
the investigative branch of the police and I had broken
quite a few laws. The Ministry of Health was in charge of
illicit drug licensing and not the police, and I had broken
the severe drug laws. Luckily, being ‘reliable’, I just had to
apologize. May I just mention that since then I have been
obtaining hashish from the police for over 40 years,
with Ministry of Health-signed documents, without any
administrative problems. I still wonder whether the absence of bureaucracy in my dealings with the regulatory
bodies has something to do with the fact that most
of the pharmacists working at the Ministry are my
ex-students, and they believe that their ex-professor is
‘reliable’. Working in a small country certainly has its
positive aspects. Discovery of THCA: Going back to science, how did you then proceed?
RM: First, I re-isolated cannabidiol (CBD), a major nonpsychoactive
constituentwhich had been isolated by both
Adams and Todd, but whose structure was only partially
known. Yuval Shvo, a close friend, and I were able to
establish its structure and stereochemistry mainly by
NMR analysis, using an early NMR machine [1].The publicationonCBDcausednoscientific
ripples.Over the years,
however, interest in CBD has gradually increased. There
are hundreds of publications on it now. It is a potent
anti-inflammatory agent. A few years ago, together with
Ruth Gallily in Jerusalem and Mark Feldmann in London,
we found that it lowers the production of tumour necrosis
factor (TNF)-a, a potent inflammatory cytokine, and
reduces the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis in amouse
model [2]. Many years previously, in a clinical trial in
Brazil, headed by E. Carlini, we found that it is a good
anti-epileptic agent [3]. We then prepared and sent to
Brazil several hundred grams of CBD, which apparently
were not used fully in the epilepsy trial, and the Brazilian
group are still using it in research, which has shown lowering
of anxiety and therapeutic effects in schizophrenia;
and the Mexican group of Murillo-Rodriguez has presented
evidence that it leads to awakening [4]. Surprisingly,
itsmechanismof action is stillanenigma. It seems to
act through an unknown receptor and recent work by
Hillard has shown that it blocks the uptake of adenosine
[5]. Together with a group at the Hadassah Hospital here
we have noted that it reduces sugar levels in diabetesprone
mice [6], and another group at the same hospital led
by R. Durst has submitted a publication on ameliorating
the effects of heart ischaemia by CBD treatment. As it has
very low toxicity it may become an important drug. A: And next?
RM: In 1963 another close friend at theWeizmann Institute,
Yehiel Gaoni, joined me in the cannabinoid research.
Yehiel had recently returned from Paris with a PhD in
organic chemistry from the Sorbonne. Our goal was to
identify the active constituent of cannabis. We needed a
biologist with experience in psychopharmacology who
could give us feedback on the activity of fractions and pure
compounds isolated. We succeeded in enticing Dr Haviv
Edery, the head of pharmacology at the nearby Biological
Research Institute. He had emigrated from Argentina a
few years previously and knew about the extensive use of
maconha (South American cannabis) there. He had a
colony of rhesus monkeys and all the biological work
leading to the isolation of the active hashish component
was basedonfeedback from the rhesusmonkeys.Repeated
chromatographic separations of a petroleum ether extract
finally gave us a pure although oily compound which,
however, crystallized as one of its esters. The NMR spectrum
and elemental analysis led to its structure and we
even succeeded in preparing it from cannabidiol [7]. We
named the compound ∆1-tetrahydrocannabinol (∆1-
THC), so that its nomenclaturewould parallel that of CBD.
Unfortunately some pedantic chemists decided to follow
the strict rules of chemical nomenclature and today
∆1-THC has become ∆9-THC. ‘We named the compound . . . ∆1-THC . . .
Unfortunately some pedantic chemists decided to
follow the strict rules of chemical nomenclature
and today ∆1-THC has become ∆9-THC.’ A: So the neglect of cannabis research was overcome?
RM: Gradually scientists in various disciplines realized
that the cannabis field was ripe for investigation and
thousands of publications have since appeared on THC. It
is even used as a therapeutic drug against nausea and for
enhancing appetite. Surprisingly, it has not become an
illicit drug—apparently cannabis users prefer their marijuana
and hashish. A: And other cannabinoids?
RM: Later we isolated six or seven new plant cannabinoids.
Over the years many other groups isolated additional
compounds—mostly related closely to the original
cannabinoids we found in the plant. We were really surprised
that from the horrendous cannabinoid soup in cannabis,
only ∆9-THC affected the rhesus monkeys. As none
of the rest of the plantcannabinoids reproduced the effects
of THC in monkeys, very little work has been carried out
on them. This is a mistake. Roger Pertwee in Scotland
found recently that one of these compounds is actually a
cannabinoid antagonist and may have important medical
applications [8].Astudent of mine,Yehoshua Maor,made
a small change in the structure of a minor plant cannabinoid,
named cannabigerol,whichwe discovered in 1964,
and found that that the new compound reduces blood
pressure. I believe that the cannabinoids represent a
medicinal treasure trove which waits to be discovered. A: How was your research funded?
RM: Originally we did not need a great deal of support.
All the work was performed byYehiel Gaoni and myself. I recall that early in 1963 I applied for a grant from the
National Institute for Health (NIH), but I was told that
they do not support research on cannabis as its use was
not an American problem. How little did they know! A
year later the head of pharmacology at the National
Institute on Mental Health, Dan Efron, called me and
asked whether I could see him in a few days. He came
over and I understood that a US senator had called NIH
and asked whether marijuana would destroy the brain—
apparently his son had been seen smoking it. At NIH
nobody knew anything about marijuana but they
recalled that somebody in Israel had asked for a grant to
look for the active constituent. Efron promised financial
support, which indeed was granted shortly thereafter,
and took with him the entire ‘world’ supply of THC
which we had. This sample of THC was used for many of
the original cannabinoid investigations in the United
States, although our contribution was seldom recognized.
NIH has supported my research with grants ever
since for over four decades, although I have to work hard
to renew it every few years. I have known most of the
directors of the National Institute on Drug Abuse
(NIDA). I found that all of them were very knowledgeable
in the field and very dedicated to solving the problems of
drug abuse and addiction. I am under the impression
that much of the basic research in the world in this field
is still supported by NIDA. Of course, most of it is conducted
in the United States. I was also pleasantly surprised
to note that with NIDA the bureaucratic demands
were minor and that once a project was approved there
was no interference, either scientific or administrative,
although our results and those of my colleagues did not
always necessarily support the drug policy of the US
federal administration. By the middle of the 1960s, in
the United States the Flower Generation was blooming,
marijuana and even THC had become common words
and research money was easy to obtain. A: What were the next steps in your research?
RM: First, Gaoni and I accomplished and published facile
syntheses of almost all natural cannabinoids [9].
However, these procedures were not always easy to
procure—onmy visits to the USWest Coast I noted that in
many libraries the appropriate pages in the Journal of the
American Chemistry Society were neatly cut out. The
librarians told me that apparently some students found
them quite useful, although not necessarily for academic
purposes. The next major problem seemed to be the metabolic
pathways of THC. In a review article in Science I
bravely stated: In the absence of definite evidence, one can
speculate that a metabolite and not THC is in fact the
active compound on the molecular level. Habitues
say that marijuana has no effect when used for the
first time. While the basis of their observations may
be psychological, it is also possible that that it is due
to a biochemical phenomenon. If the hydroxylation
enzyme were an inductive one then the initial
administration of marijuana may be the triggering
act for its formation [10]. A: Other research groups also because interested in this
question?
RM: It seems that about every major group in the field
had the same idea. In 1970 four laboratories including
mine, now at the Hebrew University Medical Faculty,
reported more or less simultaneously that hydroxylation
at the 11-position was the primary metabolic step. Synthetic
11-hydroxy-∆8-THC, as predicted, sedated Edery’s
rhesus monkeys even better than THC itself. Other
primary metabolites, such as 8-hydroxy-∆9-THC and
hydroxylated derivatives on the side chain, were also
found to be active, but for some obscure reason never
became as popular in research as 11-hydroxy-THC. A few
years later, with Agurell’s group in Sweden, we found
that ∆8-THC-11-oic acid is also formed [11]. As it is
excreted in the urine (as the glucuronide) over many
weeks it is the analytical target for analysis of cannabis
use. Almost all radioimmunoassay methods used this
acid—and we had forgotten to patent it! A huge amount
of workwas conducted on the cannabinoids over the next
15 years by my group, now at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, and by many other groups, mainly in the
United States, Europe and Japan.We learned a great deal
about cannabinoid pharmacology, biochemistry and
clinical effects; however, their mode of action remained
an enigma.
A: Why did their mode of action remain an enigma? Was there
something unusual?
RM: The reasons for this baffling situation were both
technical and conceptual. On the technical side it was
noted that THC is active in both enantiomeric forms
(although with a different level of potency) and this was
incompatible with action on a receptor, which will
usually bind one stereoisomer only. However, all the work
on the stereospecificity of cannabinoid action had been
performed with THC synthesized according to a procedure
published by our group based on commercial
a-pinene [9]. We knew that commercial pinene was not
stereochemically pure and therefore led to stereochemically
impure products. Hence, the lack of streospecificity
could be due to the presence of the active (–) stereoisomer
in the presumed pure (+) isomer. So we repeated the synthesis
with stereochemically pure (+) a-pinene and tested
the (+) THC produced. It had no (–) THC-like activity, as
expected. Then we tried this again on amuch more active synthetic cannabinoid, HU-210, which is at least 100
times more active than THC. Its enantiomer, HU-211,
turned out to be inactive in a wide series of tests donperformede
in collaboration with my friends Billy Martin,
Toby Jarbe and Allyn Howlett.
The conceptual problem related to THC activity had
been raised by Bill Paton from Oxford, who had pointed
out that the cannabinoids belong to the group of biologically
active lipophiles, and that their effects should be
compared with the chronic effects of anesthetics and solvents.
Hence, following this line of thought, it was possible
to explain the action of THC without postulating the
existence of a receptor or specific action on an enzyme or
a biological system.
A: But then evidence for a receptor site came through?
RM: In 1988 Allyn Howlett, with her then graduate
student Bill Devane, brought out the first evidence that a
cannabinoid receptor exists in the brain [12]. We
assumed that a cannabinoid receptor is not formed for
the sake of a plant that has compounds that bind to it,
but for an endogenous brain ligand. I decided to try to
identify it.
The Discovery of Cannabinoid Ligands
A: The discovery of the cannabinoid ligands is an important
landmark in cannabinoid research. How was that achieved?
RM: Bill Devane had by this time completed his PhD
thesis and applied for a post-doctoral position in my laboratory.
He wanted to learn some synthetic chemistry; I
had other plans for him. We first synthesized a novel,
highly active radioactive probe (so Bill acquired synthetic
experience), and proceeded towards the identification of a
cannabinoid ligand using this novel radioactive probe.
Later, a visiting fellow from the Czech State, Dr Lumir
Hanus, joined my group. Over the next 18 months Bill
and Lumir tried to solve the isolation problems associated
with the endogenous cannabinoid ligand. Because of the
lipophilic nature of the plant cannabinoids, we assumed
that the brain ligands are also lipids; or, perhaps, we
simply wanted them to be lipids, as the laboratory had
experience with such compounds, but we did not know
how to deal with peptides.
A: Sounds difficult!
RM: The isolation problems were at first almost insurmountable.
As soon as fractions which bound to the cannabinoid
receptor were purified, they started to lose their
activity. We know now that this was due to the lack of
stability of the cannabinoid ligand. Ultimately we had a
miniscule amount of material which seemed pure and
tried to obtain a NMR spectrum. Thiswas not simple to do
on the 300 MHz machine available to us, but we let the
spectrum be run over a weekend and we ended with a
curve which contained probably more impurities than
actual material. However, two groups of peaks clearly
indicated olefinic and doubly allylic protons in a ratio of
4 : 3. Such spectra are quite typical for polyunsaturated
long-chain fatty acids. For me this was the
breakthrough—we had a polyunsaturated fatty acid
derivative, possibly an arachidonic acid derivative.
A: Exciting—what next?
RM: Then with the help of a colleague at the Technion
in Haifa, Asher Mandelbaum, we obtained a highresolution
mass spectrum which indicated that the molecule
contained a nitrogen atom, certainly not a
common feature in fatty acids. However, the structure
was now close at hand. Some more mass spectra and a
better NMR led to a final formulation of anandamide as
it stands today [13]. We were also interested in some
tests which were closer to physiological reality than just
binding to a receptor, but with the miniscule amounts of
endogenous material we had from the brain, we obviously
could not perform in vivo work. However, Roger
Pertwee in Scotland had reported experiments on inhibition
of the electrically evoked twitch response of
mouse deferens which required very small amounts of
material. We sent him some (impure) material and
within a few days he happily informed us that this material
paralleled THC in activity. However, when we sent
him pure anandamide it was inactive. Later it emerged
that the pure anandamide had oxidized on its trip from
Jerusalem to Aberdeen; the impure material obviously
contained an antioxidant.
A: How did you name this newly discovered substance?
RM: We decided to name the new brain-derived ligand
anandamide. Bill was learning Sanscrit at the time and
suggested ‘ananda’ (supreme joy in this ancient
tongue). This portion of the name certainly fits the
‘amide’ moiety of the structure. We believed then—and
still do—that the endocannabinoid system plays a role
in the formation of emotions. I looked for a suitable
Hebrew equivalent but nothing came to mind. There are
many synonyms for ‘sorrow’ in Hebrew but considerably
less for ‘joy’. In any case, anandamide certainly
brought joy to us: it has been cited over 1800 times and
its effects are studied widely.
‘We decided to name the new brain-derived
ligand anandamide. Bill was learning Sanscrit at
the time and suggested “ananda” (supreme joy
in this ancient tongue).’
A: Your group later isolated 2-AG.What was the background
to its identification?
RM: Sean Munro in Cambridge had isolated a second
receptor in spleen, which was absent in brain. I asked a
new PhD student, Shimon Ben-Shabat, to try to find the
peripheral ligand that activates this receptor. In a few
months he had an active mixture which, however, bound
to both receptors. The mixture contained no fatty acid
amides but had three fatty acid glycerol esters, one of
which—obviously the arachidonoyl one—was found to
bind to the receptors. Its binding potencywasmuch lower
than that of anandamide and we were quite uncertain of
its role as a cannabinoid ligand. By ‘we’ I mean our team
of 15 colleagues—my group, that of Zvi Vogel in
Rehovot, who performed some of the binding, Roger
Pertwee who looked at the contractions of vas deferens,
Norb Kaminski who worked on cAMP and BillyMartin in
Richmond, who performed the animal pharmacology
[14]. Today we know that the low binding was due to the
unsuitable in vitro conditions we used. Now we have
values which parallel those of anandamide and we also
knowthat the inactive fatty acid esterswhich accompany
2-AG strongly enhance its activity, and that this ‘entourage’
effect may be general with endogenous cannabinoid
ligands.
I also made a rather unbelievable mistake. Iwas under
the impression that Lumir Hanus, who was on vacation
in Prague when I wrote the paper, had told me that he
could not see any 2-AG in brain and I stupidly added a
sentence stating this. I did not check his laboratory notes
(in Czech). Later Sugiura in Japan and Piomelli in California
made us blush, as they found large amounts of 2-AG
in brain. Lumir had not even looked at that point for 2-AG
in brain.
The Complexity
A: There are numerous additional endocannabinoids known
today. They act on a long list of biological targets. Can you
summarize today’s situation?
RM: Other groups, as well as mine, have indeed identified
various fatty acid ethanolamides and glycerol esters as
well as fatty acids amides of amino acids. Some of the
new members of this family of compounds bind to the
CB1/CB2 receptors. Others do not; but new cannabinoid
receptors are also being discovered. An orphan receptor,
GPR55, has been found to bind anandamide and 2-AG,
but not some synthetic cannabinoids that are excellent
ligands to CB1/CB2. On the other hand, palmitoyl ethanolamide,
a potent anti-inflammatory agent, which does
not bind to CB1/CB2, binds to GPR55 [15]. We also
reported recently that arachidonoyl serine, present in
brain, is a vasodilator [16].
A: It seems as if one is dealing with a wide family of
substances?
RM: I believe that we should look at the endogenous fatty
acid ethanolamides and glycerol esters, aswell as the fatty
acids amides of amino acids as members of a large
endocannabinoid family.Most of them seem to be formed
‘on demand’ and their actions take place around the
areas of synthesis. Hence their effects are predominantly
local and specific. Their actions are ubiquitous. They are
involved in most physiological systems that have been
investigated—the nervous, the cardiovascular, the reproductive,
the immune system, to mention a few. One of
their main roles is neuroprotection [17], but over the last
decade they have been found to affect a long list of processes,
from anxiety, depression, cancer development,
vasodilation to bone formation and even pregnancy [18].
Over the last few years several groups have noted that the
CB2 receptor is also formed in the brain as a reaction
to numerous neurological diseases and is apparently
activated by the endocannabinoids as a protective
mechanism.
A: Do you still have contact with young scientists?
RM: I still teach graduate students at the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem. I have an enthusiastic bunch of
young people working in my group. Most are from
Israel, but a German and an American have just joined
my group. At present my group is a ‘mixed bag’ of
researchers: Moslem and Christian Arabs, observant
and non-observant Jews. They work together very well
indeed. It is a tragedy that Israelis and Palestinians
cannot get along as well as my students do. My teaching
does not have defined borders—I teach both chemistry
and biology. As I said earlier, I do not believe that Nature
has such borders. We have created artificial frontiers,
because we do not have the intellectual capacity to learn
several fields as there is too much information in them.
This is certainly true for neuropsychopharmacology. We
can study the physical, neuronal side of neuropsychopharmacogy
as well as the psychological aspects. We are
not always able to make a connection between them.
The field of emotions is one of these fields; but I hope
that some day we shall be able to understand fully both
the chemistry and neuropsychological mechanisms of
emotions, and will realize that they represent two
aspects of the same phenomenon.
‘some day we shall be able to understand fully
both the chemistry and neuropsychological
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